Gene expression in C. elegans is commonly monitored with the use of promoter::GFP fusions. However, GFP has poor signal-to-noise properties, particularly in tissues with high autofluorescence, like the C. elegans intestine. We developed a very sensitive, plate-based assay to quantitatively monitor gene expression with the use of nanoluciferase (NanoLuc, Promega), which exceeds the brightness of other glow-type luciferases like Firefly and Renilla by ~150-fold. First, we used a strain that constitutively expresses a single-copy NanoLuc gene under the intestinal promoter
vha-6p. We combined worm lysate from
vha-6p::nanoluc animals with the substrate furimazine (Promega) in 96-well plates and measured luminescent signal on a conventional plate reader. We optimized grinding temperature, plate type, substrate incubation time and explored the limitations of sample storage. With optimized conditions, we detected a robust signal over background (wild type N2) in all life stages of single worms from L1s (~15-fold) to adults (~450-fold). We even saw a 5-fold signal over background in 1:100 dilutions of single worms. In contrast, we were unable to detect a signal over background of a single-copy of GFP driven by the
vha-6 promoter in less than 1000 adults using a plate reader. Further, we measured a ~280-fold luminescent signal over background when we 'hid' a single
vha-6p::nanoluc animal in a pool of 5000 N2s. Our results demonstrate that NanoLuc is suitable for plate-reader based reporter assays and has virtually no background signal in wild type worms. Additionally, we tested NanoLuc as an inducible genetic reporter under
pals-5 promoter control. The
pals-5 gene is used as a read-out for the Intracellular Pathogen Response (IPR), which is a defense program induced by diverse, natural intracellular pathogens (Reddy et al, 2019). The IPR is also activated by proteotoxic stress. With NanoLuc, we measured a ~50-fold increase in luminescent signal after infection with the intracellular pathogen N. parisii, a ~300-fold increase upon treatment with the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib and a ~4-fold increase upon prolonged heat stress. Overall, we present NanoLuc as a powerful constitutive and inducible genetic reporter in C. elegans.